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6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-1
Chapter 6: Wireless Networks
Background: # wireless (mobile) phone subscribers now
exceeds # wired phone subscribers! computer nets: laptops, palmtops, PDAs,
Internet-enabled phone promise anytime untethered Internet access
two important (but different) challenges communication over wireless link handling mobile user who changes point of
attachment to network
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-2
Chapter 6 outline
6.1 Introduction
Wireless 6.2 Wireless links,
characteristics CDMA
6.3 IEEE 802.11 wireless LANs (“wi-fi”)
6.4 Cellular Internet Access architecture standards (e.g., GSM)
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-3
Elements of a wireless network
network infrastructure
wireless hosts laptop, PDA, IP phone run applications may be stationary
(non-mobile) or mobile wireless does not
always mean mobility
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-4
Elements of a wireless network
network infrastructure
base station typically connected to
wired network relay - responsible for
sending packets between wired network and wireless host(s) in its “area” e.g., cell towers
802.11 access points
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-5
Elements of a wireless network
network infrastructure
wireless link typically used to
connect mobile(s) to base station
also used as backbone link
multiple access protocol coordinates link access
various data rates, transmission distance
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-6
Characteristics of selected wireless link standards
384 Kbps384 Kbps
56 Kbps56 Kbps
54 Mbps54 Mbps
5-11 Mbps5-11 Mbps
1 Mbps1 Mbps
802.15
802.11b
802.11{a,g}
IS-95 CDMA, GSM
UMTS/WCDMA, CDMA2000
.11 p-to-p link
2G
3G
Indoor
10 – 30m
Outdoor
50 – 200m
Mid rangeoutdoor
200m – 4Km
Long rangeoutdoor
5Km – 20Km
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-7
Elements of a wireless network
network infrastructure
infrastructure mode base station
connects mobiles into wired network
handoff: mobile changes base station providing connection into wired network
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-8
Elements of a wireless network
Ad hoc mode no base stations nodes can only
transmit to other nodes within link coverage
nodes organize themselves into a network: route among themselves
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-9
Delay-tolerant network (DTN)
Delay- or disruption-tolerant networks Intermittently connected No contemporaneous end-to-end path may
exist between source and destination Eg, networks of moving vehicles, mobile
sensors, people, etc.
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-10
Wireless Link CharacteristicsDifferences from wired link ….
decreased signal strength: radio signal attenuates as it propagates through matter (path loss)
interference from other sources: standardized wireless network frequencies (e.g., 2.4 GHz) shared by other devices (e.g., phone); devices (motors) interfere as well
multipath propagation: radio signal reflects off objects ground, arriving at destination at slightly different times
…. make communication across (even a point to point) wireless link much more “difficult”
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-11
Wireless network characteristicsMultiple wireless senders and receivers create
additional problems (beyond multiple access):
AB
C
Hidden terminal problem B, A hear each other B, C hear each other A, C can not hear each
othermeans A, C unaware of their
interference at B
A B C
A’s signalstrength
space
C’s signalstrength
Signal fading: B, A hear each other B, C hear each other A, C can not hear each other
interferring at B
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-12
Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) used in several wireless broadcast channels
(cellular, satellite, etc) standards unique “code” assigned to each user; i.e., code
set partitioning all users share same frequency, but each user
has own “chipping” sequence (i.e., code) to encode data
encoded signal = (original data) X (chipping sequence)
decoding: inner-product of encoded signal and chipping sequence
allows multiple users to “coexist” and transmit simultaneously with minimal interference (if codes are “orthogonal”)
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-13
CDMA Encode/Decode
slot 1 slot 0
d1 = -1
1 1 1 1
1- 1- 1- 1-
Zi,m= di.cmd0 = 1
1 1 1 1
1- 1- 1- 1-
1 1 1 1
1- 1- 1- 1-
1 1 11
1-1- 1- 1-
slot 0channeloutput
slot 1channeloutput
channel output Zi,m
sendercode
databits
slot 1 slot 0
d1 = -1d0 = 1
1 1 1 1
1- 1- 1- 1-
1 1 1 1
1- 1- 1- 1-
1 1 1 1
1- 1- 1- 1-
1 1 11
1-1- 1- 1-
slot 0channeloutput
slot 1channeloutputreceiver
code
receivedinput
Di = Zi,m.cmm=1
M
M
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-14
CDMA: two-sender interference
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-15
Questions
Give an example of two codes that do not allow the receiver to correctly decode the original bits transmitted by the senders.
Which properties of an ideal multiple access protocol does CDMA have?
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-16
Chapter 6 outline
6.1 Introduction
Wireless 6.2 Wireless links,
characteristics CDMA
6.3 IEEE 802.11 wireless LANs (“wi-fi”)
6.4 Cellular Internet Access architecture standards (e.g., GSM)
Mobility 6.5 Principles:
addressing and routing to mobile users
6.6 Mobile IP 6.7 Handling mobility
in cellular networks 6.8 Mobility and
higher-layer protocols
6.9 Summary
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-17
IEEE 802.11 Wireless LAN
802.11b 2.4-5 GHz unlicensed
radio spectrum up to 11 Mbps direct sequence
spread spectrum (DSSS) in physical layer
• all hosts use same chipping code
widely deployed, using base stations
802.11a 5-6 GHz range up to 54 Mbps
802.11g 2.4-5 GHz range up to 54 Mbps
802.11n 2.4-5 GHz range up to 248 Mbps multiple antennae
All use CSMA/CA for multiple access and support both base station and ad-hoc network versions.
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-18
802.11 LAN architecture
wireless host communicates with base station base station = access
point (AP) Basic Service Set (BSS)
(aka “cell”) in infrastructure mode contains: wireless hosts access point (AP): base
station ad hoc mode: hosts
only
BSS 1
BSS 2
Internet
hub, switchor routerAP
AP
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-19
802.11: Channels, association 802.11b: 2.4GHz-2.485GHz spectrum divided
into 11 channels at different frequencies AP admin chooses frequency for AP interference possible: channel can be same as
that chosen by neighboring AP! host: must associate with an AP
scans channels, listening for beacon frames containing AP’s name (SSID) and MAC address
selects AP to associate with may perform authentication [Chapter 8] will typically run DHCP to get IP address in
AP’s subnet
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-20
IEEE 802.11: multiple access avoid collisions: 2+ nodes transmitting at same
time 802.11: CSMA - sense before transmitting
don’t collide with ongoing transmission by other node
802.11: no collision detection! difficult to receive (sense collisions) when transmitting
due to weak received signals (fading) can’t sense all collisions in any case: hidden terminal,
fading goal: avoid collisions: CSMA/C(ollision)A(voidance)
AB
CA B C
A’s signalstrength
space
C’s signalstrength
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-21
IEEE 802.11 MAC Protocol: CSMA/CA
802.11 sender1 if sense channel idle for DIFS then
transmit entire frame (no CD)2 if sense channel busy then
start random backoff timetimer counts down while channel idletransmit when timer expiresif no ACK, increase random backoff
interval, repeat 2
802.11 receiver- if frame received OK
return ACK after SIFS (ACK needed due to hidden terminal problem)
sender receiver
DIFS
data
SIFS
ACK
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-22
Avoiding collisions (more)
idea: allow sender to “reserve” channel rather than random access of data frames: avoid collisions of long data frames
sender first transmits small request-to-send (RTS) packets to BS using CSMA RTSs may still collide with each other (but they’re
short) BS broadcasts clear-to-send CTS in response to RTS RTS and CTS heard by all nodes in range
sender transmits data frame other stations defer transmissions
Goal: Avoid data frame collisionsusing small reservation packets!
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-23
Collision Avoidance: RTS-CTS exchange
APA B
time
RTS(A)RTS(B)
RTS(A)
CTS(A) CTS(A)
DATA (A)
ACK(A) ACK(A)
reservation collision
defer
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-24
framecontrol
durationaddress
1address
2address
4address
3payload CRC
2 2 6 6 6 2 6 0 - 2312 4
seqcontrol
802.11 frame: addressing
Address 2: MAC addressof wireless host or AP transmitting this frame
Address 1: MAC addressof wireless host or AP to receive this frame
Address 3: MAC addressof router interface to which AP is attached
Address 4: used only in ad hoc mode
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-25
Internetrouter
AP
H1 R1
AP MAC addr H1 MAC addr R1 MAC addr
address 1 address 2 address 3
802.11 frame
R1 MAC addr AP MAC addr
dest. address source address
802.3 frame
802.11 frame: addressing
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-26
framecontrol
durationaddress
1address
2address
4address
3payload CRC
2 2 6 6 6 2 6 0 - 2312 4
seqcontrol
TypeFromAP
SubtypeToAP
More frag
WEPMoredata
Powermgt
Retry RsvdProtocolversion
2 2 4 1 1 1 1 1 11 1
802.11 frame: moreduration of reserved transmission time (RTS/CTS)
frame seq #(for reliable ARQ)
frame type(RTS, CTS, ACK, data)
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-27
hub or switch
AP 2
AP 1
H1 BBS 2
BBS 1
802.11: mobility within same subnet
router H1 remains in same
IP subnet: IP address can remain same
switch: which AP is associated with H1? self-learning (Ch. 5):
switch will see frame from H1 and “remember” which switch port can be used to reach H1
Mobility across subnets is more complex.
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-28
Mradius ofcoverage
S
SS
P
P
P
P
M
S
Master device
Slave device
Parked device (inactive)P
802.15: personal area network
less than 10 m diameter replacement for cables
(mouse, keyboard, headphones)
ad hoc: no infrastructure master/slaves:
slaves request permission to send (to master)
master grants requests
802.15: evolved from Bluetooth specification 2.4-2.5 GHz radio band up to 721 kbps
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-29
Chapter 6 outline
6.1 Introduction
Wireless 6.2 Wireless links,
characteristics CDMA
6.3 IEEE 802.11 wireless LANs (“wi-fi”)
6.4 Cellular Internet Access architecture standards (e.g., GSM)
Mobility 6.5 Principles:
addressing and routing to mobile users
6.6 Mobile IP 6.7 Handling mobility
in cellular networks 6.8 Mobility and
higher-layer protocols
6.9 Summary
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-30
Mobile Switching
Center
Public telephonenetwork, andInternet
Mobile Switching
Center
Components of cellular network architecture
connects cells to wide area net manages call setup (more later!) handles mobility (more later!)
MSC
covers geographical region base station (BS) analogous to 802.11 AP mobile users attach to network through BS air-interface: physical and link layer protocol between mobile and BS
cell
wired network
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-31
Cellular networks: the first hopTwo techniques for sharing
mobile-to-BS radio spectrum
combined FDMA/TDMA: divide spectrum in frequency channels, divide each channel into time slots
CDMA: code division multiple access
frequencybands
time slots
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-32
Cellular standards: brief survey2G systems: voice channels IS-136 TDMA: combined FDMA/TDMA (north
america) GSM (global system for mobile
communications): combined FDMA/TDMA most widely deployed
IS-95 CDMA: code division multiple access
IS-136 GSM IS-95GPRS EDGECDMA-2000
UMTS
TDMA/FDMADon’t drown in a bowlof alphabet soup: use thisfor reference only
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-33
Cellular standards: brief survey2.5 G systems: voice and data channels for those who can’t wait for 3G service: 2G
extensions general packet radio service (GPRS)
evolved from GSM data sent on multiple channels (if available)
enhanced data rates for global evolution (EDGE) also evolved from GSM, using enhanced modulation Date rates up to 384K
CDMA-2000 (phase 1) data rates up to 144K evolved from IS-95
6: Wireless and Mobile Networks 6-34
Cellular standards: brief survey3G systems: voice/data Universal Mobile Telecommunications Service
(UMTS) GSM next step, but using CDMA
CDMA-2000
(….. for mobility, refer K&R 6.5-6.9 slides with L10)